A Select control built with and for React, initially being developed for use in KeystoneJS.
Live demo: jedwatson.github.io/react-select
To build the examples locally, run:
npm install
gulp dev
Then open localhost:8000
in a browser.
This is currently a work in progress.
It's loosely based on Selectize (in terms of behaviour and user expereience) and React-Autocomplete (as a native React Combobox implemenation), as well as other select controls including Chosen and Select2.
TODO:
- CSS Styles and theme support (working, could be improved)
- Documentation website (currently just examples)
- Custom options rendering
The easiest way to use React-Select is to install it from NPM and include it in your own React build process (using Browserify, etc).
You can also use the standalone build by including dist/select.js
and dist/default.css
in your page. If you use this, make sure you have already included React and Underscore.
npm install react-select --save
React-Select generates a hidden text field containing the selected value, so you can submit it as part of a standard form. You can also listen for changes with the onChange
event property.
Options should be provided as an Array
of Object
s, each with a value
and label
property for rendering and searching.
When the value is changed, onChange(newValue, [selectedOptions])
will fire.
var Select = require('react-select');
var options = [
{ value: 'one', label: 'One' },
{ value: 'two', label: 'Two' }
];
function logChange(val) {
console.log("Selected: " + val);
}
<Select
name="form-field-name"
value="one"
options={options}
onChange={logChange}
/>
You can enable multi-value selection by setting multi="true"
. In this mode:
- Selected options will be removed from the dropdown menu
- The values of the selected items are joined using the
delimiter
property to create the input value - A simple value, if provided, will be split using the
delimiter
property - The
onChange
event provides an array of the selected options as the second argument
If you want to load options asynchronously, instead of providing an options
Array, provide a asyncOptions
Function.
The function takes two arguments String input, Function callback
and will be called when the input text is changed.
When your async process finishes getting the options, pass them to callback(err, data)
in a Object { options: [] }
.
The select control will intelligently cache options for input strings that have already been fetched. Async options will still be filtered like the normal options array, so if your async process would only return a smaller set of results for a more specific query, also pass complete: true
in the callback object.
Unless you specify the property autoload="false"
the control will automatically load the default set of options (i.e. for input: ''
) when it is mounted.
var Select = require('react-select');
var getOptions = function(input, callback) {
setTimeout(function() {
callback(null, {
options: [
{ value: 'one', label: 'One' },
{ value: 'two', label: 'Two' }
],
complete: true
});
}, 500);
};
<Select
name="form-field-name"
value="one"
asyncOptions={getOptions}
/>
You can control how options are filtered with the following properties:
matchPos
:"start"
or"any"
: whether to match the text entered at the start or any position in the option valuematchProp
:"label"
,"value"
or"any"
: whether to match the value, label or both values of each option when filtering
Both properties default to "any"
.
You can also completely replace the method used to filter either a single option, or the entire options array (allowing custom sort mechanisms, etc.)
filterOption
:function(Object option, String filter)
returnsBoolean
. Will overridematchPos
andmatchProp
options.filterOptions
:function(Array options, String filter, Array currentValues)
returnsArray filteredOptions
. Will overridefilterOption
,matchPos
andmatchProp
options.
For multi-select inputs, when providing a custom filterOptions
method, remember to exclude current values from the returned array of options.
MIT Licensed. Copyright (c) Jed Watson 2014.